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Mick Jones (The Clash) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mick Jones (The Clash)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mick Jones
Mick Jones during his time with Big Audio Dynamite (NYC, 1987)
Mick Jones during his time with Big Audio Dynamite (NYC, 1987)
Background information
Birth name Michael Geoffrey Jones
Born 26 June 1955 (1955-06-26) (age 52)
Brixton, South London, England
Genre(s) Punk rock
Rock
Occupation(s) Singer, Guitarist
Years active 1975–present
Label(s) CBS Records, I.R.S. Records, Radioactive Records
Associated acts The Clash, General Public, Big Audio Dynamite, Carbon/Silicon
Notable instrument(s)
Gibson Les Paul
Fender Telecaster

Michael Geoffrey "Mick" Jones (born 26 June 1955) was the lead guitarist and a vocalist of the British punk rock band The Clash until his dismissal in 1983. He went on to form the band Big Audio Dynamite with Don Letts, before line-up changes lead to the formation of Big Audio Dynamite II, and later Big Audio.

In recent years, Mick Jones has been collaborating with fellow punk icon Tony James, using the moniker Carbon/Silicon, and has released several albums of original material between 2002-2007.[1]

Contents

[edit] Early life

Jones was born in Brixton, South London, England to a Welsh father and a Russian Jewish mother.[2] He spent much of his early life living with his maternal grandmother, Stella, in South London. Jones went to Strand School - and then on to art school, because "[he] thought that's how you get into bands and stuff".[3]

But even before the Dolls, I used to follow bands around. I followed Mott the Hoople up and down the country. I’d go to Liverpool or Newcastle or somewhere—sleep on the Town Hall steps, and bunk the fares on the trains, hide in the toilet when the ticket inspector came around. I’d jump off just before the train got to the station and climb over the fence. It was great times, and I always knew I wanted to be in a band and play guitar. That was it for me.

Mick Jones to Gibson Backstage Pass Holiday Double Issue 2006 , [4]

He started gaining recognition as a guitarist in the early 70s with his glam rock band, The Delinquents. A short time later, he met Tony James and formed the proto-punk London SS. By 1976, the band had broken up and remaining members Jones, Paul Simonon and Keith Levene were seeking a new direction.[5]


[edit] The Clash

Main article: The Clash
Mick Jones on stage with The Clash
Mick Jones on stage with The Clash

When he was 21, he (and Paul Simonon) were introduced to Joe Strummer by Bernie Rhodes (the self proclaimed inventor of punk rock) in a dirty squat in Shepherd's Bush. The band practiced in a disused railway warehouse in Camden and The Clash were formed. Jones played lead guitar, sang, and co-wrote songs from the band's inception until he was fired by Strummer and Simonon in 1983. Jones' lack of punctuality played a major role in his dismissal from the band; he would frequently abandon rehearsals and gigs.

For his time with The Clash, Jones, along with the rest of the band, was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003.[6]

[edit] Big Audio Dynamite

Main article: Big Audio Dynamite

After his expulsion from The Clash, Jones was briefly a founding member of General Public. However, by the time that band's debut album appeared, Jones was no longer an official band member, although he did play guitar on many of the album's tracks.

Leaving General Public behind, in 1984 Jones formed Big Audio Dynamite with film director Don Letts, who had directed various Clash videos and later the Clash documentary Westway to the World. The band's debut album This Is Big Audio Dynamite was released the following year, with the song "E=MC²" getting heavy rotation in dance clubs, and both singles "Medicine Show" and "E=MC2" charting in the UK Singles Chart.

For Big Audio Dynamite's second album, No. 10 Upping St., Jones reunited with Strummer. Together, the two wrote several songs on the album, including "Beyond the Pale", "V. Thirteen", and "Sightsee M.C."; Strummer also co-produced the album. Their reunion did not last long, and following that collaboration, the two did not work together again for some time.

Big Audio Dynamite's third album, Tighten Up, Vol. 88, featured cover art painted by the ex-Clash bassist, Paul Simonon. Shortly following its release, Jones developed chicken pox, along with pneumonia and spent several months in hospital.[7][8] After his recovery, Jones released one more album with Big Audio Dynamite, Megatop Phoenix, before reshuffling the line-up, renaming the band Big Audio Dynamite II and releasing The Globe album.

In 1991, Jones was featured on Aztec Camera's song "Good Morning Britain", with Roddy Frame.

The band's line-up was reshuffled again in 1994, and they released the album Higher Power under the name Big Audio. In 1995, a greatest hits album, Planet B.A.D. was released as well as a studio album called F-Punk under the original Big Audio Dynamite name. A further album, Entering a New Ride was recorded in 1997, but was only released on the internet due to disagreement with Radioactive Records, their then record label. One more "best of" collection, called Super Hits, was released in 1999.

[edit] Recent projects

In 2002, Jones teamed up with his former London SS colleague, Generation X and Sigue Sigue Sputnik member, Tony James to form a new band named Carbon/Silicon. The band has toured the United Kingdom and has performed a number of anti-fascist benefit concerts; they have also recorded three albums: A.T.O.M, Western Front and The Crackup Suite which were available online for free. Their first real release was The News EP. The band encourage their fans to share their music on P2P networks, and allow the audio and video taping of their shows. Their first song, "MPFree" is an anthem for P2P file sharing.[9]

Jones has also become an occasional producer. He was at the controls for the London based band The Libertines debut album Up The Bracket. The CD was critically well received, both in the UK and U.S. Jones stayed on to produce the band's second and final album The Libertines. He also produced Down In Albion, the debut album of former Libertines lead singer and guitarist Pete Doherty's new group Babyshambles.

Jones is also credited with contributing guitar and vocals to "Mal Bicho," the lead track of Los Fabulosos Cadillacs' album Rey Azucar.

He recently provided the score for Nick Mead's film, Dice Life - the Random Mind of Luke Rhinehart, a contemporary dance film created by Nick Mead and Wayne McGregor, featuring Luke Rhinehart, author of The Dice Man.

At the NME Shockwave 2007 awards, Jones took to the stage and performed White Man in Hammersmith Palais with Primal Scream.[10]

[edit] Friendship with Richard Archer

Richard Archer first met Mick Jones when he was still with Contempo. The band were looking for a producer when one of the members of the record company suggested Jones, to which the band agreed to. At a rehearsal in Putney, Richard compared his dress sense to that of "the Godfather".[11][12]

Archer worked for a year on the band's first record, but things didn't work out as planned due to problems with the record company.[13][14]

Talking about Archer, Jones said:

"I guess I can have a lot of fun at this stage in my career and I like working with young people such as Rich because they're full of new ideas. I wouldn't say I'm a mentor to him, though. I just like to try to have some fun and play a few tunes.[15][16]

At Hard-Fi's NME Awards show at the Koko club on 6 February 2008 Jones appeared with Hard-Fi to perform the Clash's Should I Stay or Should I Go and Hard-Fi's Stars of CCTV.

On March 1, 2008, rumours started appearing that the two would be forming a new band after Archer joined Jones and his new band, Carbon/Silicon, during a show in London. They revealed that they were thinking about combining the two bands to form a project called "Hard Carbon".[17]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Carbon/Silicon. Carbon Silicon Discography (ASPX). Carbon/Silicon. Retrieved on 2007-12-17.
  2. ^ Mick Jones (I) - Biography. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2007-12-17. “Sid Vicious gained the enmity of The Clash's Mick Jones due to his habit of wearing a Nazi Swastika t-shirt. Jones, who is Jewish, and the rest of The Clash vowed they would never appear on stage with the Sex Pistols.”
  3. ^ Letts Don; Rick Elgood, Joe Strummer, Mick Jones, Paul Simonon, Topper Headon, Terry Chimes, The Clash. (2001). The Clash: Westway to the World [Documentary]. New York, NY: Sony Music Entertainment; Dorismo; Uptown Films. Retrieved on 2007-11-26. Event occurs at 3:50–4:50. ISBN 0738900826. OCLC 49798077.
  4. ^ Stay Free: Mick Jones Lokks Back at The Clash. Gibson Backstage Pass Holiday Double Issue 2006. Gibson.com (12 2006). Archived from the original on 2007-09-10. Retrieved on 2007-12-17. “But even before the Dolls, I used to follow bands around. I followed Mott the Hoople up and down the country. I’d go to Liverpool or Newcastle or somewhere—sleep on the Town Hall steps, and bunk the fares on the trains, hide in the toilet when the ticket inspector came around. I’d jump off just before the train got to the station and climb over the fence. It was great times, and I always knew I wanted to be in a band and play guitar. That was it for me.”
  5. ^ Renshaw, Jerry (May 22, 2000). "From Here to Eternity – The Story of the Clash". The Austin Chronicle. Austin, Texas: Austin Chronicle. OCLC 32732454. “When Mick Jones finally began attracting attention for his guitar playing, he was in a glam rock outfit, the Delinquents, complete with long hair, feather boas, and poncey trappings; in time he would meet up with Tony James (later of Generation X and Sigue Sigue Sputnik) to form the London SS. With a revolving-door cast of players including future members of the Damned, Chelsea, and PiL, London SS took the first stack-heeled, shambling steps toward punk, naming among their influences the Stooges, MC5, and New York Dolls, and in the process acquiring future Clash manager Bernie Rhodes. By 1976, London SS had fallen apart, and Jones found himself in a new band with guitarist Keith Levene and art-school dropout Paul Simonon. Simonon had spent much of his time hanging out with his West Indian pals and immersing himself in reggae, ska, and skinhead fashions, elements that would later be part and parcel of the Clash. Meanwhile, in another part of London, 24-year-old John Mellor was bashing away in pub-rock outfit the 101ers. The band caught the interest of Simonon and Jones, still in search of a frontman to round out their lineup.” 
    Related news articles:
  6. ^ The Clash. Induction. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum (2003-03-10). Retrieved on 2007-11-19.
  7. ^ Robbins, Ira Robbins; Jem Aswad, Michael Azerrad. TrouserPress.com :: Big Audio Dynamite (PHP). TrouserPress.com. Retrieved on 2007-12-17. “The disappointing Tighten Up Vol. 88 reaches no such peaks and now sounds like a fairly brazen attempt to get hip commercial airplay. The fault is seldom with Jones' songwriting but more with the slick sheen laid over the leaner, less aggressive beats. The LP yielded "Just Play Music" and "Other 99," but a pall was thrown on the release as Jones fell deathly ill shortly after its appearance; having contracted pneumonia, he was hospitalized for months.”
  8. ^ Punk Legends Form Rock Band Carbon/Silicon. National Public Radio: Music. Retrieved on 2008-01-29.
  9. ^ Carbon / Silicon – Music at Last.fm. Last.fm. Retrieved on 2007-12-17. “Similar in many respects to Jones' earlier work in Big Audio Dynamite, Carbon/Silicon aims to break the traditional approach to rock and roll. The band was described by critic Alan McGee as "...the Stones jamming with a laptop," and they make use of samples in their recordings and live shows. The formation of the band was catalyzed by the internet and p2p file sharing. The first song written by Jones and James was entitled "MPFree," in which they expressed their willingness to embrace the technology of the internet and file sharing, in the interest of spreading music, rather than profit.”
  10. ^ ChartAttack.com Staff (2007-03-02). Doherty And Moss* Naughtiness Overshadows Arctic Monkeys At NME Awards (CFM). News. Chart Communications. Retrieved on 2007-12-17. “Jones joined Primal Scream to close the show with a cover of The Clash's "(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais," which was performed in honour of the storied venue's imminent closing. Primal Scream also played "Movin' On Up," "Country Girl," "Rocks" and "Swastika Eyes."”
  11. ^ "Mick Jones & Richard Archer." The Independent on Sunday (London, England) (March 9, 2008)
  12. ^ A Scan of "Mick Jones & Richard Archer" from The Independent on Sunday (London, England) (March 9, 2008)
  13. ^ "Mick Jones & Richard Archer." The Independent on Sunday (London, England) (March 9, 2008)
  14. ^ A Scan of "Mick Jones & Richard Archer" from The Independent on Sunday (London, England) (March 9, 2008)
  15. ^ "Mick Jones & Richard Archer." The Independent on Sunday (London, England) (March 9, 2008)
  16. ^ A Scan of "Mick Jones & Richard Archer" from The Independent on Sunday (London, England) (March 9, 2008)
  17. ^ Hard-Fi's Richard Archer Set For Clash Link-Up

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links

Persondata
NAME Jones, Mick
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Musician (Singer, songwriter, guitarist)
DATE OF BIRTH June 26, 1955
PLACE OF BIRTH Brixton, South London, England
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH


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